Read Madeline Wyndzen's short essay published in the American Psychological Association Division 44 (LGB) newsletter. After J. Michael Bailey published his book, the newletter published an affirming review by James Cantor. Surprised that they would positively review a book that promoted a mental illness model of transgenderism, I asked about the possibility of writing a review from a different perspective.
They graciously agreed.

A Personal and Scientific look at a Mental Illness Model of Transgenderism

If a man sought therapy due to unhappiness over his attraction to other men, a therapist would likely diagnose him with Depression. If a transsexual sought therapy due to unhappiness over his or her biological sex, a therapist would almost certainly diagnose him or her with Gender Identity Disorder. Whereas gay men and lesbian women are diagnosed for how they suffer, transsexuals are diagnosed for who they are. As a psychologist and transsexual, I find that the mental illness label imposed on transsexuality is just as disquieting as the label that used to be imposed on homosexuality.

Similar to antiquated ideas suggesting that homosexuality is a deviant sex-drive, Ray Blanchard (1989, 1991) proposed that transsexuality is a mis-directed form of either heterosexuality (named "autogynephilia") or homosexuality. Rather than asking the scientifically neutral question, "What is transgenderism?" Blanchard (1991) asks, "What kind of defect in a male's capacity for sexual learning could produce … autogynephilia, transvestitism …?" (p. 246).

Blanchard's model is featured prominently and uncritically in J. Michael Bailey's (2003a) recent book, The Man who would be Queen: the Science of Gender-Bending and Transsexualism. A balanced portrait of Blanchard's key empirical findings (1989) would reveal that they: (1) have never been replicated, (2) failed to include control groups of typically-gendered women, (3) failed to covary the acknowledged age-differences from ANOVA, and (4) drew conclusions about causality from entirely observational data.

Inconsistencies between transsexuals' self-portraits and Blanchard's model are reconciled by Bailey (2003a) with the suggestion that some transsexuals are deceptive: "There is one more reason why many autogynephiles provide misleading information about themselves that is different than outright lying. It has to do with obsession" (p. 175). Aware of concerns that some may be troubled by his portrayal of them, Bailey has said, "I cannot be a slave to sensitivity" (quoted in Wilson, 2003), and " There is good scientific evidence that says you should believe me and not them" (quoted in Dreier & Anderson, 2003). In a critique of Bailey's book available on my website, I provide alternate interpretations of this evidence:

http://www.genderpsychology.org/autogynephilia/

Bailey (2003b) contends that negative reactions to his book are merely "identity politics" that are a "hindrance" to "scientific truth" (Bailey, 2003b). Contrasting his objectivity with others' politics reminded me of "81 Words," a radio documentary about the removal of homosexuality from the DSM (Spiegel, 2002). Those who diagnosed ‘homosexuality' as a mental illness genuinely felt that they were helping their clients. I know that Ray Blanchard, J. Michael Bailey, and others are similarly concerned about the welfare of transsexuals. I only wish they would see the bias in their theories and diagnoses. When I listened to "81 Words," I was struck by how foreign it sounded to talk about being gay or lesbian as a disorder. I am too young to remember that time. My hope is that someday my children will think it just as unfathomable that I was once diagnosed and treated for "Gender Identity Disorder."

References

Bailey, J. M. (2003a). The Man who would be Queen: the Science of Gender-Bending and Transsexualism. Joseph Henry Press, Washington DC.

Bailey, J. M. (2003b, July 19). Identity politics as a hindrance to scientific truth , presented at the conference of the International Academy of Sex Research. Abstract retrieved July 16, 2003, from http://www.iasr.org/meeting/2003/ABSTRACTS2003.doc

Blanchard, R. (1989). The Concept of Autogynephilia and the Typology of Male Gender Dysphoria. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 177(10), 616-623.

Spiegel, A. (2002, January 18). 81 words. This American Life , retrieved January 18, 2002 from http://www.thislife.org/pages/descriptions/02/204.html

Wilson, R. (2003, June 20). Dr. Sex': A human-sexuality expert creates controversy with a new book on gay men and transsexuals. Chronicle of Higher Education, retrieved June 27, 2003, from http://chronicle.com/free/v49/i41/41a00801.htm

In accordance with APA copyright standards, please note that: "This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record."

I hope visiting All Mixed Up Perspectives on Transgenderism and 'Gender Identity Disorder' was helpful and informative for you. It's taken a lot for me to figure out who I am and where I fit in the world. Part of how I now see myself is why I share these experiences with you. It's because of your visits that I continue developing this web-site! I would greatly appreciate if you would consider putting a link on your site to my site.